Premounted unit of a tube portion and a thermostat valve

ABSTRACT

A premounted unit of a pipe stub and a thermostatic valve, said pipe stub comprising a valve seat mechanically biased by a valve spring against the valve seat and resting at its other end against a mating rest element, further comprising an expansible element which is configured between a segment of the pipe stub and the valve member and which opens the thermostatic valve as a function of temperature against the force of the valve spring, said unit further comprising a U-shaped retention yoke of which the central strip rests against the mating rest element and the legs can be connected to an annular cap element thereby recesses being constituted at mutually opposite sides at the inside of the annular cap element and the legs of the retention yoke being fitted at its ends with outwardly pointing hook elements that engage the recesses.

The present invention relates to a pre-assembled unit of a pipe stub and a thermostatic valve, in particular for an internal combustion engine, as defined in the preamble of claim 1.

In conventional internal combustion engine cooling-systems, a pump moves a coolant, as a rule a mixture of water and glycol, through the engine block and the cylinder head of the internal combustion engine and then through an oil-water heat exchanger and in parallel through a radiator. Conventionally a thermostatic valve is inserted in the circuit and is closed initially when starting the engine, as a result of which the coolant shall not pass through the radiator. The thermostatic valve is only opened at operating temperature by an expansible element so that the path to the radiator shall be open.

Thermostatic valves comprise a valve member prestressed by a valve spring against a valve seat and opened by the expansible element at a corresponding coolant temperature. At its other end the valve spring rests against a mating rest element. The mating rest element may simultaneously constitute a guide for the valve member and is linked by a U-shaped retention yoke to a portion of the cap element. The central strip of the U-shaped retention yoke passes through the mating rest element and the legs of the U are inserted into apertures in retaining arms integral with the cap element. Following assembly, said retaining arms project into the receiving aperture in the engine block.

The objective of the present invention is to create a pre-assembled unit of a pipe stub or a thermostatic valve which can be installed free of additional assembly labor into the engine block of an internal combustion engine.

This problem is solved by the features of claim 1.

The unit of the present invention is fitted with recesses in opposite sides on the inside of the annular cap element and the legs of the retention yoke are fitted at its ends with outwardly pointing hook portions entering said recesses.

Said recesses in the cap element may be manufactured in simple manner, in particular according to one embodiment mode of the present invention whereby the recess is linked by an aperture to the cap element's external side which faces the mating rest element. In this manner the pipe stub and the cap element may be made integrally by means of injection molding and be ejected from the mold by oblique sliders. In summary, the assembly by means of the above cited retention yoke is inherently simple. The manufacture according to the present invention moreover offers the advantage of allowing using a radial or O-ring seal sealing off the engine block. Using a radial or O-ring seal relieves the cap element from compressive forces that otherwise would arise in the presence of an axial seal. In summary, the cap element may be made smaller and consist of a comparatively more economical material.

The annular or O-ring seal may be secured in place in that a groove be constituted in the periphery of the cap element and shall at least partly receive said seal.

In a further embodiment mode of the present invention, the unit is designed to be integrated into an aperture of the motor vehicle's engine's block, said aperture being closed as needed by the cap element, further in that a stop situated some distance from the aperture is configured in the engine block and acts as a support for the mating rest element when the cap element seals off the aperture in a manner that the retention yoke's legs shall be at least partly relieved from the valve spring's pressure. This embodiment mode offers the advantage that the retention yoke may be made of plastic. This retention yoke is substantially freed from the operational forces exerted by the valve spring. The retention yoke needs absorbing the valve spring's bias forces only following assembly of the constituent parts and till the final assembly to the engine block.

One illustrative embodiment of the present invention is elucidated below in relation the Figures shown in the appended drawing.

FIG. 1 is a perspective side-view of a unit of the present invention,

FIG. 2 is a section of FIG. 1 but in a position rotated relative to FIG. 1, and

FIG. 3 schematically show the integration of the unit of FIGS. 1 and 2 into an internal combustion engine' engine block.

FIGS. 1 and 2 show a first pipe stub 10 between the ends of which issues a second stub 12. An annular cap element 14 is integrated into the end opposite the free ends of the first stub 10. The cap element is used to affix the unit shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 into an engine block aperture as further discussed below. For that purpose the cap element 14 comprises protrusions 16, 18 each fitted with an affixation hole 20.

The annular cap element 14 is fitted at its inner side with an oblique valve seat surface 22 cooperating with a valve member 24. The structure of this valve member 24 will not be discussed in detail herein.

The valve member 24 comprises an upright, hollow and piston-shaped casing 26 receiving an expansible element 28. A pin 30 of said expansible element rests on an inner offset 32 of the first stub 10. The annular valve member 24 is biased by a valve spring 34 against the valve seat 22. A cage-like mating rest element 36 is configured at the opposite end and supports the associated end of the valve spring 34. The mating rest element is fitted with mutually spaced, peripheral prongs 40 to guide the piston-shaped casing 26.

FIGS. 1 and 2 show the thermostatic valve's position at low coolant temperatures, for instance room temperature. When the temperature rises, the expansible element 28 applies a force on the valve member 24, as a result of which said valve member is lifted off the valve seat 22 to allow the coolant to flow through the cooling system of the omitted internal combustion engine and to operate a radiator. Such a principle is widely known.

As shown especially clearly in FIG. 1, a U-shaped retention yoke 42 comprises a central strip 44 and legs 46, 48. The central strip 44 runs through the mating rest element 36 and the legs 46, 48 are fitted at their lower ends with hook elements 50, said hook elements engaging a matching recess 52 at the inside of the annular cap element 14. The legs may be also slightly prestressed away from one another in order that the hook elements may snap into the recesses 52. The hook elements 50 subtend an acute angle with the associated legs 46, 48. As indicated at 54, the recesses are open toward the top side of the cap element 14. The retention yoke 42 is designed to keep together the pipe stub 10 and the thermostatic valve jointly with the mating rest element into one pre-assembled unit, the retention yoke 42 absorbing the bias of the spring 34.

A shoulder 56 is constituted in the periphery of the cap element 14 and receives a radial or O-ring seal 58. FIG. 3 shows that this zone comprises a groove to assure seating the O-ring 58. The O-ring is configured somewhat more deeply than the free top side of the cap element as indicated in the Figures.

An engine block 60 is shown in FIG. 3, its internal combustion engine being omitted. Also, the unit shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 is shown in FIG. 3 being integrated into an engine block aperture 62. Part of the cap element 14 is received in a first portion 64 of the cylindrical aperture 62 of which the cylinder wall is engaged by the radial or O-ring seal 58. While not shown here, the ears 16, 18 of the cap element 14 are screwed tight against the engine block 60.

As indicated in FIG. 3, the mating rest is forced during assembly against an offset 66 of the aperture 62 by a force sufficient to press the legs 46, 48 of the retention yoke 42 a slight distance toward the pipe stub 10. In this manner the offset 66 practically constitutes the mating rest element for the valve spring 34. As a result, the function of the retention yoke 42—which serves merely to constitute a pre-assembled unit such as shown in FIGS. 1 and 2, and which may be easily integrated into or removed from the aperture 62—is not needed in engine operation. 

1. A pre-assembled unit consisting of a pipe stub and a thermostatic valve, wherein the pipe stub is fitted with a valve seat receiving a valve member which is mechanically biased by a valve spring against said valve seat, said spring resting at its other end against a mating rest element, an expansible element configured between a portion of the pipe stub and the valve member opening, as a function of temperature, the thermostatic valve against the force of said spring, said unit further comprising a U-shaped retention yoke of which the central strip rests against the mating rest element and of which the legs can be connected to an annular cap element of the pipe stub, characterized in that recesses are constituted in opposite sides at the inside of the annular cap element and in that the legs of the retention yoke are fitted with outwardly-pointing hook elements engaging the recesses.
 2. Unit as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that the hook elements subtend an acute angle with their associated legs and in that the recesses geometrically match the hook elements.
 3. Unit as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that the recess communicates through an aperture with the outer side of the cap element facing the mating rest element.
 4. Unit as claimed in one of claim 1, characterized in that a radially acting or O-ring seal is mounted on the periphery of the cap element.
 5. Unit as claimed in claim 4, characterized in that the radial or O-ring seal is configured in a peripheral groove in the cap element.
 6. Unit as claimed in one of claim 1, characterized in that it is designed to be integrated into an aperture in the engine block of an internal combustion engine, the aperture being sealed as needed by the cap element, in that a stop is configured in the aperture at a distance from the cap element, the mating rest coming to rest against said stop when the aperture is sealed by the cap element in a manner that the legs of the retention yoke are relieved at least partly from the pressure of the valve spring.
 7. Unit as claimed in one of claim 1, characterized in that the retention yoke is made of plastic. 